Newspapers / The Concord Times (Concord, … / June 4, 1896, edition 1 / Page 1
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c THE CONCORD WEEKLY TIMES The niost widely circulate), paper i ovorpnuuanoain r ' i us, Richmond , j f Davidson, Randolph, -J Stanly, Ansoii arid Union Counties. r5 . 1 1 STICK A TIN HERE; I " f"' t'4 "".t, y-t . "W" -I'll -a ' - - - - , ' , - - - : . - - - . uuui nnu uuu r l l lliu TVIODEItATEi t.-iVi i :wesX - V.u-lrM- ! I III II I II III! u " ' t .. . era rin na Volume Xni. . CONCORD, N. C J THURSDAY, JUNE 4, 1896 Nnmbei 49. THE PROSPEROUS SOOTH. Il EdmoncU Ketorus From a Trip Through the Soathr-Cotton SpUuUea to Keack 4,000,000 in Kambr by the End of This Tear The Southern Feach, Tear.aud Waterinclon. Crops Sufe-Western Trade Seeklnff Southern Vorts. Witt P " . U U U 63 INDU,5TRIAlNTERliSTS OF ALI-KINDS TTo are nervous. weak. 'B'crn cul l- , - . -. vH local troubles find pure blood, Mr- K i!ci; strength, and perfect health ic Thr0 JI"d(ls barsaparilla. . , i " Afe do, apt say the abovdi to raise c !H ' of many, very many iomen in I tliof intensely trying periods which DaltUnore News, 27th. tlcuSiiia ana consume so muchL ; I " t,. , , -Tr , I . ;. - TT-7 A--? Hr.-.Eichard H. Edmonds, editor of git - - .f i' -ttne Manafactarers- Ivecord, who recent ly returned Irom a trip to the South, in an interview with a reporter of the News today, said that : throughout the entire forctf those special physicaUtfala we ?utl1 tJiere was a marked tendency to mterests. . -: Chesapeake and Ohio and tl.n fce ef Mood's Sarsanarili; a relU ,noiK. ana, esiernv rauroaas. abKjbiood-puriner ana tons; it n&a mm wg (m n Executed in the Best Style -2- si ... - " AT rvcf b pbices. -; - -, Our Jo,b Printing Department with ever necessary equipment, is prepared to turn out every va riety - of Printing .in, first-class style.; botch-work turned Out from this office; We dupli cate the prices of any legitimate establishment.' " . ueuegitely mdicate.bv mereltrftsmer the f ttonl .'ai.l - Mnthnp TvrnfMn " I ticeable m lndustrirtl T'Jin a nfidoTitiAl frfonrl r4knro. I ' "'Along the stretching from Hampton Eoads" out hfln&l ninnv others and win hsin vou. I """S" K, ,rrl I - , w. c ' jI-'C ; i is evervwhere seen "Iaa ia poor health five years, broken -ja tivtt v.:. QOwn ui sireDgin, sou upiui? a goii-o. ; Local troubles and other weaknesses in- a very decided in tensified lay iai6ery. Nervous iJk i GirziBiess, well 6ti ' to trf a heart bnrn and pains In my ade me think I ehould bever be ain. A Inena prevaileq nton me lood's Barsaparilla; I sopq began The output of coal is ir..J 1 I 1 : 1 1 .J L . I tiuiucr iaus.- ami uuai lauua axe ueing f purchased for ; development, and the eyiaence8 of improvement cannot fail to i impress anyone jvho investigates this territory. "In the Central South, the Carolinas and Georgia, there is no abatement, in the activity in cotton mill building and in the extension of existing plants. By V. 'A f .Uw t - .1. Cf ii i iuw cuu ui lilt; picocui. year me ouuul Lava found ITood,'s Sarsaparllla Ja grand rnalMriQ f alt f rnnhlAB .nannlUwl (a' 4 can do ! Hood's I ca now strong and healthy an a 5093 ay'a'-' wok. I stand by Sarsaptrilla, for if cured me after other r.iodicijH'S failed." JlES. Lx?p ; DIES, Xarliavilie, Illinois. -5 - This and many similar cures pove.that Barsapari Is :!ie Ose True Blood Purifier. All dnigists. $1. I'r -jun k only by C. L Hood &Co., ILowell, Mass. Hoots Pills are purely Tesje table, care folly prepared. .25 cents. lloui AniGBnau - Bit Mt. Pleasaiiti is .destined to be to improve and in six months ItVtored will have about 4i000,00 spindles, rep E13 t better health than for ylars. I resenting an aggregate capitalization of nearly $125,000,000, against 1,700,000 I fpindles with a capitalof $61,000,000 in tlie census year: 1890, thus showing an increase of over 100 ner cent, m the j number of spindles within six years, i 1 - "Business matters in Atlanta ,are showing favorable results, as the out come of the Exposition,- and . statistics show that more building is now being ilone in the city and of a higher class of residences, as well as of business houses, than ever before. i -" "la South , Georgia the peach "and watermelon and pear crops are now safe, and investigations show that the peach crop will be the largest ever pro duced in the State. -The aggregate val ue bf the fruit crops of that district for the year is being estimaud as high as $7,000,000 or 18,000,000. It is "calcu lated that the fruit and melon crop of Georgia will this year furnish from 15, 000,000 to 20,000,000 carloads of freight to the railroads. ; J i "The' immigiation movement into that territory is extremely active, and plans, aie maturing Jor considerable colonization enterprises, in addition to those already in -operation," including the bringing of German and Scandin avian settlers; as well as of Northern and Western' people. Along the Georgia and Alabama Kailroad, which is largely owned in Baltimore there are some half a dozen colonization undertakings, in addition to the Fitzgerald Grand Army movef.ieHtr,whichi aas aafeauly ," settled over S000 V estern. people on the 100,- 000-acre tract of land purchased for that purpose last year. Probably the most marked improve ment and . One indicative of the most wide-reaching influence UDOn industrial matters is seen in the Alabama iron and coal districts. Birmingham is talkmga decided turn from the better, and within the last few weeks half a dozen j impor tant enterprises involving investments of about half a million dollars have been nut oh foot, while two extensive steel plants are practically assured. - 'The; Birmingham Rohing-Mill Com- nanv. one of the oldest and largest con cerns in the State, has decided to build a steel plant with a capacitypf 200 tons a day to furnish steel lor its own worts, and this will be constructed without re- elrd to any outside financial aid. Jhe $1,000,000 steel enterprise projected by th& Tennessee Coal. Iron and Railroad Com nan v is assuming tangible snape, nHhou!?h ho time has been set for the . o , . work of construction. - "Hie output of coal is thei heaviest in tf.a f,;tr.rv nf the State, ana. notwitn . vi.al.-Kman, President of .thetgreat ika'WnriAxi whih fttill nre- ..;? ( o iner-'journai CompattyJ sayst : standing the low prices v nicn suu.pre ' i8 rs:t;itu,s Cuui Tonic enrofl two i Vnil fnr iron, the production is very V -ina aIter ma!!TtUer U-eavy, and nearly all of the f urnaces of ijg:;. a.;r, the leaainsf -ttrotist or ; tQe State are m blasu S43 ". 2H-M., savs : .1 nave a kooji siw j . -.'sgiiifv-rsniitli's Chill Toma here, and 1 1m nhrsic-iaaa of the towuirdscrUe . rwf iIia fUtnth iathe trend h!hr.; of V estern uaue inrougn oquineru ixria Newport News, as.- all Baltimoreans know, are developing a great exporting business. ' - "The whole outlook," said Mr. Ed monds, ."indicates a broad and 6olid development of the. entire South,.: Its industrial interest are prospering and expanding, notwithstanding the general complaint .of hard times ; throughout other sections. . The farmers are less in debthan at any time since the war, and while they1 are preparing fot a large cot ton crop, this year's cotton" will be pro duced at the lowest cost ever Known to the South. -A - - - ; -:r - - "Moreover, there is a very "marked increase in gold mining interests," and while much -money has in times past been recklessly squandered in specula tive gold enterprises in the South, there .is a good prospect for a 'solid and sub stantial development of Jgold interests. The great decrease in the cost of reduc ing .gold ores - which has "come about within the last two or three years makes available the vast quantities of low grade ores found all the way from" Vir ginia to Alabama. " . "One of the recent processes, which seems to be meeting with,: success and which if permanently successful promis es to nave a material effect unon: the South, is now in operation at Blacks- burg, s. U At that point well-known capitahstslhave expended about f 200.- 000 during the last two years in experi mental worirand fanauy ra the building of an extensive plant "for treating sul phured ores. : At this plant, which is now running night and day, all the in gredients of the ore are saved ; and it is estimated that these byproducts will pay tne cost of operating, leaving the gold as clear gain. "One of the most important features of this is the low cost a,t which sulphur ic acid is being produced. : This has induced . a combination of fertilizer companies to build la $100,000 fertilizer plant a few hundreds yards from the sulphuric-acid works, and the sulphuric acid is ! carried - m leaden pipes direct" from the acid chambers to the fertilizer works. . ':,''.- 'It is thought that this will bring about a reduction in the cost of fertili zers, which may have a considerable in fluence upon agricultural interests, while helping to develop the gold-mjn-jng interests of the South." ? -i -V OVElt COO TEOPUE Kltl.EO. Terrible Cyclone at tit. Louis mVT.falch Man' -dreds of People are Ilurlef into ' : , . -, torulty.'.-..'."::- i FOB rotlNG- - LADIES 1 I IN THE SOUTH. A11 .ble Faculty j 7 ' lof Nine Teachers. th; lijilily reliable School is this am bition of the management. ' 'In. .i T. FISHER. Principal. "Another notable evidence of the gen 'y pHysieian reoonrniendsit s a 11 me jiity. juroavit, to - ;vi:n-f-of six children cannot Hva ;u;-ys Mr. 0o. .W. Klrby,' Forest City. Via.RSSITE'S CHILL TO!; . . r iXi'H:-..'ar & Graham Chin i '! 5 :T: ft rove. 9 ' the .ri-- . St. ' Louis; . Mo., May. 21 At 9 o'clock this morning it la impssiblo to tell the exact number of perst as killed by the terrible eyclone : which went over this city last niarht. "A consei-vative esti mate of the number killed In SK Louis is 200 and in East St Louis the cumber of those: killed is - placed at about J 250. This report is based : upon j the - reports now at hand. The telephone and tele' graph wires are down" and it is? difficult at this hour to -learn the total loss of life, but these figures seem to be "warj ranted by: the-news already gatherel The number of buildings totally de stroyed ia St. : Louis is placed at ' 100. wbile the number of those unroofed and otherwise wrecked ; is over 1,000. The greatest area of damages is just south of the centre of the city, where there are many large factories just below the tracks at Clenton street extending west to Sixteenth street. The storm . played havoc in the quadrilateral space cover ing two miles. The report that the Chi cago & Alton "traia;was overturned is untrue, although the ' train wa3 badly wrecked. The damage : to the Eads bridge is not as bad as was at first re ported, but one span of the great iron bridge was blown away. The loss of property wkere ;the hurricans was the worst is estimated to be, up in the mil lions. The debris and wreckage is sup posed to hide many victims from sight. The list" of the identified dead is over 100 while maty are reported missing. More uncertainty exists as to the lo3s of life along the river front than.anywhere else. Steamers wereblown adrift. The fated excursion steamer Republic is said to have 500 persons aboard. It is de nied, hovever, that it ..together with the passengers has been lost. . - . The Chicago & Alton train while cross ing the bridge was blown over, but the loss of life was not great. ..' The latest estimates of the dead out side of St. Louis i3,Qak Drake, Illinois, 80, Rush Hili, Mo,, 10: Renict, Mo,, 5; Labaddie, Mp., 10. Thousands of persons are in jured. The auditorium in course of construction for the Repub lican contention was in the immediate path of the storms. It wilt require ten days to re-construct it J - All the workmen , that can te em- ; - DEFENSE OF DOCTORS. Monroe Enquirer. -. l- - ' " 'The doctors -never forsret to charare. and nine-tenths of them have become rich off of the poor people, and cure or no cure, the pay is alt the same and not only so, some of them cannot go to see suitenng-nesh . after night, let them 1: j . -n i . . me or uie. x eojue- seiaom sena lor a doctor unless . they need him and he should go if possible. . Our phjsicians expect pay , and they should ' have it, and there ought' to be a law enacted that doctors should be required to at tend calls at all hours, or their license taken from them and .not be allowed to trifle with dear human life as they of ten do.", - - - , v The foreeoine is taken from a prirretu pbndence to the Stanly - Enterprise of last week, and is a portion of an article, some parts of which are meritorious. A TriontDh of Ynl-ffftrlfrw- The press dispatches recently cave an I ploved will be needed to repair the dam account of what is probably the most ex- J age to building in St. Louis and East pensive, and certainly the most vulgar. I St. Louis and it may, cause a delay in banquet pf many days. It was given I the reconstruction of the auditorium in Pans by the son cf a multi-million-Jit ia also thought that it js not likely aire. - as tne papers) said, it seemed. .too that the city will be in shape to receive extravagant"-to be true, but those to j the delegates even if the buildings are wnom me entertainment was credited I repaired bv tha time the convention is have not contradicted the account, as J called. :. There seemed to be three sep they assuredly should if it were false. I erate cyclones from the Northwest, West Twenty-five guests were bidden to. the I and Southwest. When they reached feast, among them ' members of . the I Missippi vthey- became one which de French nobility and rich Americans. I scended upon East St. Louis and from Twentv-fivfi nf thft finrst prmii-Mwrpq nf 1 tripng rwtumt -on 'tnwQi-H xXt P9ti9 woro iwnl; tr unue luc , nucour i ijooi jivv most of whom must have possessed car-1 relay depot, twenty riages of their own to the house of their host, or rather to the celebrated restaurant which served as his. home for the moment.' - ' To each gusst was served an ihdi- vidual repast entire: each truest had: a who!e"legof mutton, a whole salmon, a whole truffled fowl, a whole basket of peaches, and a double : mangum of champagne besides other wines and delicacies. ' . . ' - After the feast was over a black silk bag was brought by a waiter, and from the bag each guest in turn drew a sou venir. These were pins, links, ciga rette cases and such trifles of gold and precious stones. The Cost of the din ner was said to be very nearly twenty thousand dollars. four dead at " lht dead at the Erst switch house, Eads bridge, 6 members of the wharf boat, probably 200 squat ters on the river front, 16 vandila at the freight depot,- 12 at the Louisville and Nashville freight Idepot, 17 at the Bis Four freieht depot, a at the Air line freight house. Twenty employees! tor's get rich off the poor people. but for downright "tommvrot." igno rance and,, prejudice we will put that litde jingle of words against the world. Did the correspondent weigh his words? Did he have any idea of what he was saying ? We don't kpow what manner of man he is, but the paragraph refer red to sounds very much like the, rat tling talk of one of those fellows who had rather talk than listen,- though Shakespeaije'were the speaker and hu man nature his theme.- We say this- ad visedly, for had the gentleman stopped for a moment and considered.he would have seen the error of his statement. -No class of men do more charity work than do physicians."-' They ander-,i go; privations, hardships and annoy ances unknown . to those outside tne profession. Where Is the physician in this country who has become rich off of the poor people ? Where is the phy sician in this section who is rich off of anybody ? ; The physician does more charity work than all other classes com bined. Often he gets out of bed on a cold night and rides for miles to soe a patient 'whom he knows is too poor to pay, and for whom he never expects to receive a cent. The doctor is blamed with things be yond his or human control, and if the patient recovers oftentimes the friends and relatives with long faces and un grateful hearts and in mockery of thanksgiving say: "His recovery was a wonderful display of divine power;" but if the patient dies, those aforesaid relatives are mighty quick to say: "Well, the doctor might have-doue better,' it seems to me." An thus unthanked, unpaid, worh out with a hard life of toil the faithful doctor, trudges home one patie maturely worn out form on his couch and i3 never called to drag his weary frame up and away over rough- roads, through winter's cold or summer's heat, for he makes surrender to that grim power he has fougfit so long and goes down in that oblivious gloom where all prostrate ranks of men crowd without ; Jlis administrator finds thousands of dollars on his books Uncollected and un- collectable ' and not enough - of this world's goods left to keep the wolf from the door of his surviving family. No. sir: vou are entirely off when you say that "nine-tenths of the doc- the buixv ran. 1 "HOCSE NERVES." Average human naiure en joj'S few outh's Companion. ' uungs oeiter man to see a bully whip- A recent writer upon medicar subjects ped. A correspondent of the Washing- has invented the name "House Nerves," ton Star, describing hie in the logging which he applies to a particular kind of Camt8 Of Allphicran o.mliApa himself a nrl : l .' .i-ri . . , k: 4 V 0 '. -v.-"--";"."- sjjuiuarw moroiu lrriiapimy. ine L1!"-,11? "ngbteous disease, for such it is to be called; at- judgment that befell a logger ol the swaggering sort, a man of powerfui muscles and a boastful tongue. -: t He was- really so strong that noboay cared to contest the point with 'him, but his brag and his quarrelsomeness made him generally disliked,; -On day he said: ' .J - "I'm tired of these bapies in camp. I ain't had a good fight iri Michigan. I can whip my weight in dogs, wildcats or anything that breathes for a hundred dollars."" A meek-looking ; man took the bet and arrangements for the fieht Were made. It was to take place in a closed roTOT,-Trao-wextlftmth-itme-The"T3et was made." - . , ' ; The day came, and the chanMion tacks those persons, women especiallv. who remain to much indoors. f , Sometimes this keeping in the hous'e is largely a matter of indolent habit; often,- pf course, it seems to be necessary on account of the pressure of family duties; and not infrequently it is in duced or encouraged by a dread; more orless ill-founded, of exposure to the weather. - " t! A distressing 6ympton of the malady is a chronic Btate of evil foreboding. The victim of house nerves studies her self, her ailments, her wants, her lone liness; -or she "is forever anticipating trouble forJbcr husband and her ch'tf rrerrrLTving so muchrwlihta- rrerse'if, it is easy for her to fall into h habit of brooding over trouble, be the same real or imaginary. - This condition - of w.orry not only works injury to her health, but reacts upon her disposition, till she . becomes, perhaps, what siwcialists in nervous dis eases call a "nagging womau,," and then, as a matter of course, home is made uncomfortable and matters m came, called, "Bring on your animile. lbe man who had bet against" the king of the camn brought his antagonist in a large sack, which bad been deposit ed behing the 6tove in the Baloon where the match was to be-held, the weather just beginning to get; cold. , The gladia tor,- entered the room, the sack ' was emptied and the people crowded at, the I from bad to worse , j bco tne cuuiat&l. j vu,fr 01. me . And much of this tronble would be sack came three large hornet nests, : the avoided if the woman vcnnT.l n-nUr occupants of which had been revived by more out-of-doors. The' inhabitants of Ihey issued from Hie nests in swarms, nerves tha n tlmsAho live fawhor nnr(i. and lit all over the Wan. He fought! th reason hf; no- da nwmi i;i.i' the.m for a "minute or two, then, with a- because' thi rlimtn kfllfc 'hrtir imnnVi yell, jumped through the window, carry- less in the house. . ' ingsash and glass with him,' and never Nowhere are nervous patients more stopped until he reached the river, into numerous than in the United States, mcu i e juuipeu. . , and it is well, therefore, for everv one "baid he could whip his weight in to know that th'wRt anything that breathed," remarkedithe found in drugs: but in sunbht. pure meek little man, as ; he pocketed 3 the air and innocent -diversion . To a void stakes, -"but about, five pounds, r of "house nerves" keep as much as mssi hornets knocked him out in the first ble out of the house. Sunshine will do rOUnd. ...... ' . much fn hvitrVit an tlti Triinrl itcix-iP 'is m Asssoiuteijr Paro. nfAnr?of ta.rtarhaltinsr iwder. Highest kLLV? lcveui,S strengthlatest United btates Government I 00O. lieport. BorxL iJAKixq Fowdew Co., New Vork. PROFESSIONAL CARDS, H. LILLY W. m. LILLY 8 ttl.U I I her their professional services to the citizens of Concord and vicinity. A1J caljs promptly attended day or night. Oflice and. residence on East Depot street, opposite Presbyterian church. ikf "Jut His Luck." 'I'm hungry and 1 ragged and sick and dead-broke," muttered a tramp the other day, as he sat down for & sun- bath on the wharf at the foot of Gris- wold street; "but it's just my luck. Last fall I got into Detroit just two hours too late to sell my vote. Nobody to blame. Found a big wallet on ?the street in December, and four po ice came up before 1 could hide it. . He Got Evlu. Boston Trahscrlpt. Salesman "Yes, I suppose the' news paper business is rather interesting, but then I should think there must be many objectionable experiences you have to go through this interviewing, fof example." i Journalist "Rather, but then.- vou Iiick know, we always get the best of a fellow again. Got knocked down by a street- who cuts ! up rough. There was old lu laiimui uuttur, uuug nume cari bufc mere wag nQ opeiling,for a fnit Mortarboard,' for instance. I called at day and never goes to see another fojf damages,-because I was drunk, his house one night to ask him if it was ant. lie Stretches his weaned, pre- jnsf thfi T,aRt. foil no jls were W trmTrhat ho. was in the W.ir, of hpntina down. I knew there d be a rise, but II hia wife. 1 ' . didn't buy and hold for the advasce. Lost ten thousand dollars out and 6ut. Alius that way with me. Glass went up twenty-five per cent., but I hadn't a pane on hand, excepting the pain; in my back. Never knew it to fail. Now fgucISfetto feauzeonTui again. Fell into the river t'other dayi but instead of pulling me out and giving Salesman "Thunder! What did he say?" i ' Journalist "Didn't say a- word; he Simply kicked me off the steps. But I came out ahead, as usuaL Next morning old Mortarboard had the pleas- board last evening ( to ascertain the prevalent and apparently well authen- DR. W. C. HOUSTON, ' Ssrgecn festist, "COSCORP, X. . c. Is prepared to do all kinds of l4witnl work in the most approved manner. - Office over Johnson's Drug Store. - IT : : W.J. MONTGOiTBay. 3. IiKK OEOWELIi . . Attorneys and Connselcrs-at-Law. - COXCOBU, X. 0. - "'-''' As partners, will practieo law in Ca bar rus, Stanly and adjoining counties, the Superior and Supreme Courts of the State and in the Federal Courts. Office on Depot Street. , Parties desiriug to lend money can leave it with us or plaee it in Concord National Bank for us, and wo will lend it on good real estate' security 'free of charge to the depositor. - We malri thorough examination ei title to lands offered as security for loans. ; Mortgages foreclosed without expense to owners of same. - ' me a hot whisky they pulled me out and j ticated rumors of the habit indulged in told me to leave town or I'd get (the by the professor, of beating his -wife in of the St. Louis . Wooden Gutter -and Refrigerator Company were crushed be neath the "falling, walls " and hurled against the sides of the building, struck by flying timbers, ' cut by ehattenu glass and shocked by net v.r.rk wires. Humanity suffered in ways innumera ble. The names of ail the injured will never be known. Thousands were, at tended at the dispensaries last night The Laclede Gas Company's tank al Fourteenth and Gatroit streets was Comment fails, and if needed, would struck bv lightning and exploded, lhe be hopeless. . : . first roof of the poor house in the south ern part of the city was cameo, away, rhert the towerv-crusnea tnrougn uie .... ' : '' ".! 3 : il. fho bundingi uyer a mousanu were iu. vuc The average physician's riches consist not in this world's goods, but are of deeds of mercy he has done, and they shall not be forgotten. The poor, the fatherless, the widow and the outcasts of earth shall rise up and call him bounce. That's me again. Now J've got settle down here for a bit of a rest and a snooze, but I'll be routed ou in less than fifteen minutes, and I kriow it. It'll be just my behanged luck i'f He settled down, slid hisjat overihis face, , and was just beginning to feel sleenv when a hundred I pounds of coal rattled down on him S ' "I knew it I knew it 1" shouted the the most brutal manner. Prof Mortar board was for some reason best known to himself, very guarded in his language and absolutely declined either to con firm ordenv the stones which are so treely circulated.' " or vour preiuuice, condemn as oeing grasping and a robber of the poor blessed, whom you, iu your ignorance tramp as he sprang up and rubbed ihe dust off his head "1-said so all pie time. And I just wish the dumed 5cad hogsheafl had come down along with the coal and jammed me througn tne wharf." - J. - . V He Wanted the Best- Youth's CompanSoa- fact that there is a great deal of human building which was supported by eight nt.A n,kA AnAn,Ar. rl dmma rr arrwtt mRSlVt; IXJILUJUUD. ttll Ul ""ivx FIEZE & TITDMYV ' TKUrAililUK3..i ! DEALERS IX 1 a r 1 . .... . , v .1 ... ; ,' y, f -;i nilu d aXDS OF Wl lit III, the est J. til i' i- lull I !pi Miss. i-s work and lowest : ?; u trmtoed. See U3 betore -". e'siiwhere. ; Prices olid :s Ittrnis'tedon aplic.ttrrjnJ laci's Oil Stml : We.t Dopot Street. ; j i.( if J. wafsd-An Idea Who' can think cf bma tlmple ttiloi to catent? jnnr may Dnng you wemi", u'j V: V "BUln' D-c-,or the,r '8U0 VT& fdyce: t Vh - T)nTing' the last nine months with- j New- Orleans has exported 15,000,000 imshels of corn, against 2,000,000 busn els for - the corresponding time of , the' previous year; New OrleahS, by the way, will shortly be in advance in pome respects of every city in the world in its shipping fatalities. 1 . ' "Just below the city a new shipping rint has been established, where $2,- 000,000 or $3,000, 000 has been invested in building a grain elevator, cotton warehouses, four of the most powerful cotfon coniDresses in theworld and docks and piers for steamship purposes. At this point 'Wharfage is entirely free, thus offering great attractions to steam snips. A 'belt -railroad owned by the same corn Dan y connects with all railroads en tcring New Orleans, and freight trams rttined for that point are handled as soon as they strike the belt railroad with comr.r-ssed air locomotives, thus avoid- ;nr ti. '(inwr of fire with locomotives viinninT in and out betsveen cotton ware . This! necessarily " '"brings"' about a' great reduction in , the dost of in sura net;. .":.''; i ' 'v,t to be outdone bv this movement, tn Tlhnois Central Railroad is spending about $1,000,000 in- the building of an other grain elevator and ' additional i Bhipping - facilities and this; company vill also-furmsn iree wuanag ; that New Orleans will practicauy ne a free port before the end of the year. - At liaivesion lueie to uij f."1" movement as at New Orleans, while at h-k;o Piisa Tex.. an elevator aou utuer shipping facilities are being built to be ready for .the Opening of a direct radrcad line between that port anu n.nuNio 3 he completed about Septem ber 1, aDdupon which $16;'000.000 have imnn pmpniifd in construction work rti,rir thn l.-.Pt three years the road -TT ' Jl.!t.M t-; l.otr. snmp hmff over IW Uiuea iuuk. . n At 'rrhn an elevator is under con- cf-.'r4n- nt . Pensacola the ? Louisville a na-oc-hviitA.-'i's building" an elevator. r, esrtprtRivft shiDDing wharves; Savan t, riKarifstnn are pushing -for western trade: Port Royal has exported nerlv l.OOO.OOO - bushels of corn since the first of the year, and Norfolk to discover it, is told of an old Quaker. Many years ago, when church organs were-regarded with less favor by many people,' it was proposed to introduce one into a New England meeting house, one of the pillars of which was an old man of Quaker blood. .' -. ': ' :; He was one of the most violeht oppo nents of the" plan and expressed his views so strongly , that the person who was collecting money tor tne organ when it was at last decided to have .it, did not venture to call upon the old Quaker for a subscription. came down. - It is almost incredible that none wer3 killed and but few injured. Rail road busmess is virtually demoralized. No serious disaster is reported on any lines. ;r;vr' r'i :;: ";- '"" -'.' Later reports indicate that there is a greater loss of life than was supposed this mornin?.! There is also an in creased property loss, The. property burned is over two millions. Chicago has already offered funds for aid. The cyclone was severe at juo- berlv and Mexico, Mo., and Alton, iu stalled ; . all whart boats swepi Trains tt. .t u,fn,1j.4j itv or sunk for a distance of two miles . - . , , , , " x . I A I- TTnot ftr T .nil IK thA WOTSt WTOCK. IS at theMartel House which is one mass nf mins and still burning Many are dead. ' : ," " "? .: - ' '' - ' -o "- . " In addition to the above nearly two immlwd Rmmttera. m houseboats on lowlands, :on the TUinois shore of the river, were caught unawares by tne ior nado and nearly ever life1 was sacrificed to the fury of the storm. was greatly surprised when old man took out a substantial-looking ; wallet and presented, him with a most generous sum to add. to his collection. 1 1 TT" 1- I, n L - . .- . 1 1 n rt" .v,.T. "I I am greatly obliged, sir, but 1 hardlv thought vou would care to be asked to contribute." 1 - "My son," said the Quaker, with a suspicion of a twinkle in his serious eyes, "if thee win worship tne ixra - oy. ma chinerv. I v6uld like thee to . have a first-rate instrument" "Confea" to General Urant. Charlotte Democrat. . , :....". J A Lincoln county Confederate veter an called -to see us one day this week and presented us with a copy of the following little story, which hrst appear ed in print in 1871, and if at any time since', its droll, good-natured humor will excuse its reproduction here: f 'During the war a 'Confed' was cap tured by the Yankees and happened to be taken to Gen. Grant's headquarters, After being questioned by the General, fh nld 'Confed' asked mm where ne was sroing. . "I ain jroinsr ." said Grant, "to Rich monrl. to Petersburg, to Heaven, and it mav be I will go to hell." " After eyeing the .General for several moments, the old 'ConfedV said : i "General Grant, you can't go to Richmond, for General Lee is there; you can't go to Petersburg, for General Beauregard is there; you can't go to Heaven, for Stonewall Jackson is there; but as to going to hell, you may get there, for I know'of no Confederates in that region." . ' . ' TUlmaa a Candidate, Washington, May 25. Senator Till man, of South Carpfina, returned this morning after an absence of three weeks. He has been making speeches in-Texas, Arkansas, Georgia, Florida and South Carolina, and says: "The silver senti ment is predominant The South -..will, divide on silver or Republicanism, i'lf the Democrats declare for gold at Chi cago, theentire South and West will bolt. - It is to be silver or bust.. Tbe border States won't otay id the Denao cratic party on ; a gold platform.? I think the silver men will ; control, at Senator Tillman is a . candidate irfir the Presidency, and one of the badges prepared for his boom was shown at the capitol to-day. It is a silver pifcb- fork with three prongs, un eacn preng is impaled a gold hig. These bugs axe labeled Carlisle. Sherman and Cleye- OlDDlCnilJJ pmjufri i r Attoraey-at-Law, CONOCED,X.O. ' Office in Morris building, opposite court house. July 4 t A Revolution Predicted. i Seattle, Wash., May 25. Dr. J. H, Acton, pastor of the Unitarian church, in preaching the baccalaureate sermon in the University of Washington, yes terday, developed a sensation by pictur ing the present condition of the world in the darkest possible colors and prophe sying a speedy revolution in the United States which, he said, would be accom plished "at the cannon's mouth, if need be, and he predicted wouia over turn the existing present order of things and would really modify he national government. "The last appeal ot an outraged nation is revolution. For America now there is no redress. It must come. We don't want new hands at the helm but a new 6hip." , ' i A Place the Plague Hasn't Struck. Statesville .Landmark. v . A Mitchell' county man attending the Federal Court savs he saw a Populist Tuesday.'for the fii-st time so far as he is aware. Up in Mitchell they have Republicans and Democrats. D. G. CALDWELL, M. D., Offers his professional services-to the ; people of Concord and vicinity. Office -in rear of .bank. Night calls should . be left at my residence on Main street. - Office-Hours, 7:30 to 8:30 a. m., 1:30 to 3:30, p. m. Telephone call, No, C7. Sept. 2094. lv. . C. H. EARNHARDT, M. D,, , , , Physician- and Surgeon, MT. PLEASANT, N. C. I- Calls received and promptly attended" atallhours. Office at tuy home, late " residence of Dr. J . V. Moose. v Dfio. 20-Giu. , - : The Lord has never sent the Populist plague On them. land. On Tillman. the handle is the name-, of The storin m thi3-vicinity abated at 11 o'clock last night, and inside of an hour the temperature dropped nearly 30 degrees -"" .' .. i ' , . . . - -; . At 2 o'clock this morning - xnc citjr dispensary had cared for 105 injured. 1 ' " ; 1 " A.. :n m victims of tne storm anu iuit-uiuc ! I j - v. The Ideal Panacea. . James L. Francis. Alderman, Chicago, "I regard Dr. King's New Dis covery as an Ideal Panacea for Cough.9, j(jea(j bodies had been' reported to police Colds and Iitfnjz Complaints, having hparlnnarters. 1 No news from outside used it in mV family' for the last five j WaiiHpa rft T be secured until daylight. TToorg in t.hfl exelttsion of physician's J rru nd nf tho atiditoriUm build- j - - .. . AiJV. ,(.uw . nrAfmrintions or other praparations.' 1 ?v which the Renublican national Rey. John ; Burgus, Keekuk, Iowa, J convention will be held, is a total wreck, wntes : "I kave been a minister oi tne i b t pe xebuilt immediately. Methodist Episcopal church tor on years or more, and have never foundanything beneficial, or that gave me such Rteedv relief as Dr. King's New Discoy erv.' Try thif ideal uougn Aiemeay Trial Bottle's Free at P. B. Fet zer'aDrug htore. , . this and 'Why He Stopped Hl Paper. - A recent subscriber to a Georgia news paper writes to the editor, and makes this explanation: , . . . . "I think people autent to Bienu meir , . : 4.4J j.'Jiii J muby lor papura mi uanuy umu uuu everybody sed ne wus tne lnteingeniesi man in the kentry and had the smartest family of bois that ever dug taters." . Thn Philadephia Record is authority for the statement that the economical ?irl is-making brer last years sleeves over into bloomers. . Pure blood is the safeguard of health, Keap the blood pure with Hood's Sarsa parilla if .you would always be well. ; RnoTiHOTTSE. III". May .2- It is r ficrhtv children were kilTed in a schoolhouse at- Drake, r.;itr- Viv the c.v clone. ThnoMTXGTON. III.. May 27-Word has - Tnfhed the Chicago ' and ' Alton railroad office here than.. a cyclone has demolished the village or -ttusn nm, Mo.;' twelve miles from Mexico,; m Au drain county -The clyclone struck the town a few minutes before o o ciock anu Mow inwn the schoolhouse-. crushing its inmate The report was to the effect thai fiftv rn nils had been .killed and a number injur " English in Souml. Children savs that Mr, Geo. W. Vanderbilt needed the Baptist church at Biltmore for a barn. .He told the brethren he would build them another if they would let him : have it. They agreed to do" bo, -and how they have a beautiful house wortn 'for their old one worth about $700. . A magazine givestne iouowing unique -composition written by a tweie year old girl: . .. . . i ... , i . ,. . "A ricrtlt fimt It.tm DllOV. IUC SUU ui kernel, with a rou'gh round his neck, flue un the roadf as quick as a dear, . - , After a thvmche stopped at me uouae and wrung e belle. His tow hurt hymn ami he kneaded wrest. He was two tired tb raze his tare, pail face, and a. frant mown of pane rose from bis hps. The rnMe who herd the belle was about tn Pa?r a--naro. but she through it down andrran'with-'aU her mite, for fare , her messed would not weight, but when she the little won. tiers stood m ner eves at the site. - 'Live poor dear. Why do von K-fl hear? "Are you dyeingr ' . .T . 1 Cl. i k'iinw" ho satur "J. Hill leiut. boar him inn ber arms, as she'ought, to a roam where he might be quiet, gave him 'bred and meet, held a cent bottle tinder his knows, - untide his ehriier - ra uned him up warmly, gave hirii a miit. Hran.hm from a viol, till at last he went forth as hail as a youn hoarse." . - -" y " perfect Vrtndom nerfect health. "-Because men and "women are not perfectly wise, must, tata medicines to keep them- seJves perfectly healthy. Pure, rich blood ;a th h-vsis nf health." Hood's Sarsapa- nlU i the, one True Blood Purifier. --It gives good health because it builds upon the true foundation pure blood. Hi ' .ivJ 'still be it 7P A Valuable Prescription. ij i Editor Moirison. v iof Worthing ton, Iud , "Sun," writes s vYon-nayeavaiisa-ble prescription in Electric Bitters, and I can-cheerfully recommend it for Con stipation and Sick Headache, and as ft general system tome it has no eqna- Mrs. Anna Stehle. 2G' Cottage urrore Aw.: Chieaso. was all run down, coma not eat nor digest food;'' had a backache which never left her and felt tired and weary, but six bottles of Electric Bitters i strength. Prices 50c, and iim uet a - t -die,iECtIr i. I-. I r. trft tat-trr IS Tii "man wfe-J stai'-'ls Wly , by an3 sees the life fading out of his wife's fr.cf , sees her hcaU:i ofiir,. sees her be "pmin?' old an d 'led and'' wnintled 'she Ehouta in the perfect eniovtii!nt of visr orous, useful health, is either less than a man or else dees not know of the on retnedv which will Wn iiir. Wt tn health and strer.clti Most wonteti do not understand their of-ri bodies, or the things Uiat make them wc.l nr sitvlr. The most frequent caase of sicSr 'in women is the cause last .looked for, A women will go to a doctor when she hns. cpvip rma- or some rl'ulc uik"ht DE. H. O. HERRING, DENTIST, " - ' -1' ' ' Is ajraln at his old place over Vorke'8 Jewelry ' OOX7 COED, nr. o FIRE INSURANCE. . When ih need of Firo Insurance, call and see nS, or write. We repre sent only first-class Home and I oreign Companies. T 1 . . , . nespecnmty, woodhouse nasrjs. yjifjii Jewelers anl SllTersmitbs. DIAMONDS, WATCHER, , r clocks, - : - - JEWELRY, -: ", SILVERWARE. bottle at P. B. Fetzer's Drug Store. .ii I I iTruvt n Pills are purely vegetable, per ff.tii Viarmlpps. , always reliable and yJ " 1 ' s beneficial. '- r "m- - -:'. How to Keep a Man'i Ive. Do not buy his cigars. U Do not buy "his neckties. - Do not buy his suspenders. ' 'i Tr not crease his trousers. .. y . t Do not ask him at breakfast -hatr Le wants for dinner. . - 4" Do not insist upon his going to church simply to please you. , ' ; " DO not tell him mai your uuy, it jvu have one, takes bis temper irom uiu. Do not insist upon receiving company that is uncongenial to him. . ; , i Do not wear a bonnet when he tninss you look better in a hat, and vice versa. i)o not a8tt nun wueu ue wium uuj in the evening what he has been dobg all dav.7 . k - 1 3 Do not persist in nis giving, you same attentions he gave you before yqu got him. .--r. - - .J.J Ttn not cross .mm in ma omuiou? For heaven's Bake let him think be- is smarter than anybody else. -tv not tell him what vour dearest woman friend has said aboiit her hus band'a good quaUties . . V :! r feminine- oicaiusni. - And yet tae iauer.rs infinitely more -serious-- it is the most se.li fins sirtnew th.-t pjiv woman can have. It is the most dreadful the most dangerous. Its consequences sre always serious, and serious riarbt at the beginning: fceeau'se it is debilitating: . It saps the life and streiifith and works on the nerves to euch an extent that the whole tody if disturbed. Appetite leaves, the color goes from the face and hollows sint into the cheeks. Irritability succeeds good temper and fretfulness takes the place- of contentment." L,ittle by little life becomes more and more miserable. The woman is killhnr herself with neglect junt as surely as if she were taking deadly poison. ii:ihaos her husband can-not per suade her to go to her doctor, because sbe natnrntlv dreads the inevitable- examina tions and "local treatments.' lie can per t,r.r if ehe nppds rjeTSuasion. to taKi U Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription, fu.s truly wonderful medicine has enred hun dreds of women after the best physicians have failed.. It has been in constant use and tested every day for 30 years, . It inn t an experiment, there are no chances about It. It is a certain and infallible cure for aVLderangements peculiar to women. Those, who care to know all about it, and to re ceive the best medical work ever prepared for the, general public are invited to-send 21 one-cent stamps to cover cost of wailing vnly and receive a copy of Dr. Pierce's thousand pa-e booi, " Common Sense Med ical Adviser." Address WoTld's Dispensarj ' Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y. - hyC : Uid55i5 ui - tbiuwca " - fitted to the eyo accurately, and scientifically. Call and cei a ...1 - - . - - . . ( This is Cut a seent. If you want,: , - ' -Dollars, save them by ; ! buying from .the m 1V1 5f w IN COXCOKD. T. YORKE, 4 Optician. 5 . 3 : S z
The Concord Times (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 4, 1896, edition 1
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